Hundreds of thousands of anxious French workers will take to the streets on Tuesday in protest against the Socialist government's planned pension reforms. Organisers say the strike will be only the first of many protests against the reform.

France will witness another day of street protests and strikes on Tuesday, when the Socialist government will face another show of dissent from the public.

Just months after gay marriage protesters brought cities to a stand-still, September 10th will see workers march against the government’s controversial proposed reforms of the pension system.

Organisers say it is just the start of a movement they are confident will gain momentum as the reforms go through parliament later in the autumn.

The organisers of the demonstration, including unions and far left political parties, have called on workers to mobilise against reforms they see as plainly unfair for the majority.

Jean-Luc Jibelin from France’s Communist Party told The Local the reforms would spell “disaster” for a lot of French workers.

“This project of reform does not correspond at all to the expectations of the French people,” he said. “The reforms mean that many young people will simply not be able to qualify for the maximum pension. That is not real social progress.”

The day of action will see nearly 200 protests across the country involving members from a number of leading trade unions including the CGT, which is also calling on workers to protest over “pay and jobs” as well as “the right to a pension”.

France’s rail operator SNCF says it will post regular updates of any disruption to services caused by the strike on its website, but transport bosses in Paris are confident the capital’s rail network will not be affected.

France is under pressure from Europe to plug holes that will see its generous state pension scheme fall more than €20 billion ($27 billion) into the red by 2020.

The government proposes that employees as well as businesses pay more every month to France's retirement system, a measure sure to raise eyebrows, given the existing cost of France's social safety net, already one of the highest in the world.

The plan would also incrementally raise a French worker's contribution period from the current 41.5 years to 43 years, by 2035.

The question of pension reform has dominated the French media for recent weeks and has seen the country’s polling agencies working overtime to come up with every kind of survey related to the issue.

Two recent opinion polls suggest the majority of French people might be in the mood to revolt.

One published on the eve of Tuesday's strike revealed 61 percent of the public are backing protestors and another showed the issue was a real worry for most people with 80 percent of respondents saying they were concerned about their pensions.

'The Socialists are proposing the same thing as the Right'

Organisers of Tuesday’s march have pounced on the surveys to show the extent of opposition towards the government's plan.

“It's not just the political left who are mobilising against this reform. 80 percent of people are worried about there pensions. There is a real concern out there and it’s because of this that we will be on the streets.

“The Socialist government’s reform is basically the same as what the Right proposes, and that is to make people contribute for longer,” Jibelin said.

He dismisses the concerns of the EU and other economic commentators from both inside France and abroad, who say the reforms are urgently needed to help cut the debt.

“France has money. At this moment in time it is not bankrupt. It is just a question of choice about who the government makes pay for this debt,” he said.

However, after current Prime Minister Jean Marc Ayrault decided against raising the pension age, some unions decided not to call their members to join the walk-out, meaning Tuesday’s demo is unlikely to be on the scale of 2010.

However, Jibelin stresses this is only the beginning.

“When people think of 2010 they just remember the last street protest, which was the biggest. But it started with other smaller protests. Tuesday is just the first,” he said.

“It is important to remember that although other unions are not supporting the protest, neither are they supporting the actual reform.”

France is well-known for its enthusiasm for street protests and strikes and we are not just talking about the 1789 Revolution.